logo
Randy Moss will reportedly return to ESPN's 'Sunday NFL Countdown' for 2025 season following cancer treatment

Randy Moss will reportedly return to ESPN's 'Sunday NFL Countdown' for 2025 season following cancer treatment

Yahoo2 days ago
ESPN says it expects Hall of Famer Randy Moss to return to "Sunday NFL Countdown" in a full-time capacity for the 2025 season, the network told Andrew Marchand of The Athletic.
Moss stepped back from his role in December after revealing he had undergone surgery to remove cancerous cells in his bile duct. At the time, he said he still had to go through chemotherapy and radiation, but added he wanted to return to the desk as soon as possible. The 48-year-old also had a stent inserted into his liver due to complications from his condition.
Advertisement
Moss, who is in his 10th year with ESPN, returned to "NFL Countdown" in February for the network's Super Bowl pregame show.
'Randy's return on Super Bowl Sunday was an emotional lift — not just for our team but for the entire football community — and knowing he will resume his full Sunday NFL Countdown schedule, beginning in Week 1, has been the highlight of the offseason,' read a statement from ESPN to The Athletic.
Moss had previously drawn attention to his health problems when he wore sunglasses during an episode of "NFL Countdown."
Moss made a remote appearance during the 2025 NFL Honors ceremony, announcing Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow as the Comeback Player of the Year. During the spot, Moss wore a hoodie and hat he created in the wake of his cancer diagnosis, with the slogan "Team Moss: Let's Moss Cancer." Sales from the merchandise went toward cancer research.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jack Easterby attributes the Texans firing him to fan criticism
Jack Easterby attributes the Texans firing him to fan criticism

NBC Sports

time36 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Jack Easterby attributes the Texans firing him to fan criticism

Jack Easterby's NFL career evaporated even more quickly than it suddenly materialized. Now, nearly three years after the V.P. of football operations was abruptly fired by Texans owner Cal McNair, Easterby has offered an explanation for how and why things fell apart. Appearing on the Ross Tucker Football Podcast, Easterby suggested that he was done in by rampant fan criticism. 'There also were a lot of people that, quite frankly, we had to transition out of there,' Easterby told Tucker, via Matt Young of the Houston Chronicle. 'So, that was probably one of the other things that I would say that was really hard for people to understand on the outside. Fans love football, man. So if they're like, hey this is in between me and where I want to be, there's going to be criticism and justifiably so. That comes with it, right? That's just part of it.' It's also perhaps just part of why McNair made what at the time was a surprising decision to part ways with Easterby. He glossed over the fact that his ouster happened in 2022, the second year of G.M. Nick Caserio's tenure with the team. If things were bad enough from a fan standpoint to get McNair to dump Easterby, they weren't bad enough for McNair to also sever ties with Caserio — the G.M. who was reportedly hand-picked by Easterby, in defiance of the formal Korn Ferry search process. Blaming the move on fan reaction adroitly glosses over reality. The Texans, while Easterby was still employed there, pulled off one of the all-time coups, dumping quarterback Deshaun Watson onto the Browns for three first-round picks, and then some. With the Watson trade-and-sign becoming the single worst transaction in NFL history, the Texans deserve plenty of credit for engineering it. Consider the circumstances. Watson didn't play at all in 2021. He had more than 20 civil lawsuits pending, each of which arose from allegations of misbehavior during massage-therapy sessions. And yet the Texans managed to get four teams to submit acceptable trade terms, allowing the Browns, Panthers, Saints, and Falcons to compete for Watson's contract. Easterby was there when it happened. And yet, only months later after the Texans pulled it off, Easterby was gone. Was it really a product of fan discontent, or was there something else going on that caused McNair to break free from what seemed like the strange and inexplicable hold that Easterby had over him? The perception, if not the reality, was that Easterby climbed far faster than he should have. That he landed in a key football position without the objective skills or abilities that many other candidates possessed. If anything, fans and some in the media saw through the façade at a time when McNair did not. Something got McNair to view Easterby differently than McNair had. While Easterby's reputation, earned or otherwise, among the fan base didn't help, it's not as if McNair faced losing his role as owner over it. As Jed York once said, you don't dismiss owners. The other thing that undermines Easterby's effort to blame his firing on fan opinion is the simple reality that the Texans went from being hopefully dysfunctional with Easterby in a position of significant influence to highly competitive without him. If his firing was simply an effort to give disgruntled fans a pound of flesh, it had the incidental (and perhaps, in his mind, coincidental) benefit of pivoting the team toward becoming the perennial contender it now is. The fact that none of the other 31 teams has been linked to the potential hiring of Easterby underscores that it was something more than 'the fans didn't like me.' Easterby, whose arrival sparked among other things questions about the accuracy of his resume, has been unwanted by any other NFL team. Easterby is currently back in North Carolina. So is his former boss in New England, Bill Belichick. And despite some stray speculation and rumors that Belichick could be bringing Easterby to Chapel Hill, it hasn't happened. That possibly says it all. Unless, of course, Easterby's sudden emergence during the NFL's slow time is a trial balloon in advance of Belichick giving him a job. Regardless, like Belichick, it seems that Easterby's time in the NFL has ended. If that's because of any fan base, it would be a rare example of fan opinion overruling the whims of the people who own the teams.

Browns' Shedeur Sanders could lose QB competition because he lacks key trait of competitor
Browns' Shedeur Sanders could lose QB competition because he lacks key trait of competitor

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Browns' Shedeur Sanders could lose QB competition because he lacks key trait of competitor

The Cleveland Browns' four-headed quarterback competition still has a ways to go. Rookies Shedeur Sanders and Dillon Gabriel are trying to prove they belong in the conversation with veterans Joe Flacco and Kenny Pickett. Advertisement But only one of those guys has a particular trait, one that could make the difference once preseason games roll around. Mary Kay Cabot broke down the fact that Kenny Pickett is more naturally mobile on certain QB plays than the other competitors. "That will be Pickett's superpower in the competition: the mobility that will enable the Browns to be creative and unpredictable in the return to Kevin Stefanski's offense," Cabot writes. "With him at the helm, the Browns will not only use his legs to their advantage, but will also run the ball a lot and rely heavily on play-action. Pickett, who went 14-10 in his 24 starts in Pittsburgh, also excels at distributing the ball and letting his receivers create after the catch." MORE: The chances are increasing of a T.J. Watt trade from the Steelers Advertisement Pickett wasn't a flashy starter in Pittsburgh, but as Cabot writes, he had a winning record there. He might actually have some untapped potential, like a Baker Mayfield, to do better after an adjustment period with a new team. Pickett may not win the competition for other reasons, but at least in the mobility category, he's got a leg up. MORE NFL NEWS:

Miguel Vargas' sensational catch
Miguel Vargas' sensational catch

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Miguel Vargas' sensational catch

Everything You Need To Know About Euro 2025 | Full Time Podcast Welcome to Full Time's big UEFA Women's Euro 2025 preview podcast. Hosts Tamerra Griffin and Meg Linehan get you caught up on everything you need to know about the tournament. With the help of The Athletic's Megan Feringa, Cerys Jones, Ali Rampling and Charlotte Harpur the crew breaks down every group - from A to D - with expert analysis on the favorites, the contenders, the dark horses, the breakout stars, the narratives that need busting, and what could define this summer's action. Will England defend their title? Can Wales disrupt the 'group of death'? Are Spain truly way ahead of the chasing pack? Why is this Sweden's last dance? 56:53 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store